Farewell, Joe Keller, beloved understander of teapot drips and ponytail sways

September 17th, 2016

Today’s New York Times carries an affectionate obituary of double Ig Nobel Prize winner Joe Keller: “Joseph B. Keller, Mathematician With Whimsical Curiosity, Dies at 93“.

Joe Keller’s curiosity was infectious. One of his students (Mahadevan) also was awarded an Ig Nobel Prize. And one of that student’s students (David Hu) also was awarded an Ig Nobel Prize.

Take a look back at Karen Brown’s appreciation of Joe (teapot/ponytail) Keller.

Playtime for Thick-toed Geckos in Space

September 17th, 2016

An unplanned uncollaring led to an unexpected play session in space. This study tells what happened:

Object play in thick-toed geckos during a space experiment,” Valerij Barabanov, Victoria Gulimova, Rustam Berdiev, and Sergey Saveliev, Journal of Ethology, vol. 33, no. 2, May 2015, pp 109–115. The authors, at the Research Institute of Human Morphology, Moscow, Russia, and at Moscow State University, report:

Play behavior was observed in thick-toed geckos (Chondrodactylus turneri GRAY 1864) during a 30-day orbital experiment on the unmanned spacecraft “BION-M” No. 1. The geckos wore ornamented colored collars which made it possible to track the behavior of individual animals on video recordings. The object of the play behavior was a collar that one of the geckos had managed to remove in the pre-launch period and which floated weightless in the animal holding unit under microgravity. Four of the five geckos participated in play episodes, which were defined as one-time interactions with the collar, as well in a fuller form of play that included approaching the unmoving collar or observing its approach, manipulations with the collar and further tracking the collar. Manipulations with the collar could take the form of complicated play, such as pressing the snout against the edge of the collar rim, multiple episodes of pushing the collar with the snout, inserting the head into the collar, holding the collar by pressing the head to the container floor and tilting the head with the collar on the snout.

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The experience was recorded on video. Here’s a little chunk of that, with music added by New Scientist magazine:

(Thanks to Ig Nobel Prize winner Richard Wassersug for bringing this to our attention.)

Dr. Nakamats, still very much alive, to have 88th birthday party, in NYC

September 15th, 2016

The very much one-and-only Dr. Nakamats, who among his many other accomplishments (2) is an Ig Nobel Prize winner and (1) has outmaneuvered doctors’ predictions that he would die in 2015, will enliven his 88th birthday party by traveling to it.

If you will be in New York City on Friday evening, September 23 (the day after this year’s Ig Nobel Prize ceremony!), you are invited to join Dr. Nakamats at the party, at the mMuseumm. This video is Dr. Nakamats’s personal invitation to you:

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BONUS: A look back at Dr. Nakamat’s 86th birthday party.

Quick appreciations of Ig Nobel Prize winners, en français (#2)

September 15th, 2016

Balade Mental produced another in its series of quick appreciations of Ig Nobel Prize winners, en français:

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Here’s the first in that series:

One week from today: The 2016 Ig Nobel Prize ceremony

September 15th, 2016

The Dutch blog De Kat van Freud reminds everyone of what’s happening next week, and points to a video that’s very much in the spirit of the Ig. Here’s an auto-translation from the original Dutch:

In a week it is again: the Ig Nobel Prize will be awarded on September 22 (note: not to be confused with the regular stuff!). What would they have this year in store for us?

The Ig Nobel Prize is a parody of the Nobel Prize and annually at Harvard awarded to 10 studies that you “first laugh and then set them thinking.” Humorous investigation so. Think of the investigation Kees Moeliker (also called the “duck-guy” named) connected to the Natural History Museum Rotterdam. He is the first biologist homosexual necrophilia is described and documented in the wild duck….

And in 2013 the prize went to Laurent Bègue (and others) for their research that showed that people who (think they) are drunk themselves more attractive, smarter, finding original and funnier ( ‘beauty is in the eye of the beer holder : people who think They are drunk ook think They are attractive).

This reminded me of the fantastic, interactive campaign of the Danish bus company Movia a few years ago. It shows nicely how people overestimate themselves when they have the necessary drinks.

Unfortunately, it is not to be found online interactive version, but following videos show a pretty picture:

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